4 Quixotic Quests of the Rich and Famous

Hey, Michael Jordan, just because you're good at basketball doesn't mean you can swing a bat. And a syrupy sweet voice doesn't make you a poet, Jewel. Oh, and Paul Newman, you're a fine actor, but your salsa is ... well, it's really good, actually, but you're the exception.

Sometimes, the talented and famous begin to experience delusions of multi-famed grandeur. For all those tilting at windmills, mental_floss is here to provide the ridicule and reality check.

Prose and Cons: Mussolini's Writer's Block

While noted fascist Benito Mussolini eventually found a fulfilling career as a tyrannical dictator, his earlier ambitions were literary. Fourteen years before taking power in Italy, Mussolini penned a serial novel titled The Cardinal's Mistress for a weekly supplement in an Italian newspaper. Apparently, it was quite the bodice-ripping romance. You know, the kind filled with lines such as, "The common brutes of the market-place satiate their idle lusts on your sinful body." It goes without saying, but the book didn't do much to secure Mussolini's reputation as a writer.

Curiously, Mussolini isn't the only dictator with a weakness for romance novels. Saddam Hussein has anonymously published three, and another is purportedly on the way. None of them have been translated into English, though we hear they make Mussolini's stuff read like Proust.

Cantor Battles Shakespeare: Left Brain Takes a Right

Georg Cantor is widely regarded as the most important mathematician of the 19th century. He invented "set theory," which - in addition to making life miserable for Calculus II students everywhere - proved that some infinities are (prepare to have your mind blown) bigger than others. That's the sort of realization that can make your head hurt. And sure enough, Cantor eventually went bonkers.

But even before then, he wasn't exactly a picture of mental health. Toward the end of his life, he became obsessed with proving that Sir Francis Bacon was the true author of Shakespeare's plays via complicated schema and hidden codes the likes of which haven't been seen outside "A Beautiful Mind."

Cantor's extensive writings on the subject aside, nearly all Shakespearean scholars agree on two things: William Shakespeare, of Stratford-upon-Avon, wrote the plays attributed to him, and Cantor should have stuck to math.

Isaac Newton: Putting the Pseudo in Science

Forget Isaac Newton's famous falling apple. (For starters, that story was quite possibly made up by Enlightenment stalwart Voltaire.) Many scholars argue that Newton's theory of gravity was the product of his obsessive fascination with what was, at the time, the decidedly unenlightened science of alchemy. Newton spent more of his life studying alchemy than "real" math and science. And without his beliefs about occult forces operating in a vacuum, he might never have understood gravity. So when Newton famously said, "If I have seen further than others, it's because I stood on the shoulders of giants," many of the giants to whom he was referring were probably cranks, pseudo-scientists, and alchemists.

[Note - See previously on Neatorama: 10 Strange Facts About Newton]

Mark Twain Gets Business-Schooled


Paige Compositor - via Scientific American issue March 9, 1901 at Twain Quotes

Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer was the first novel composed on a typewriter. Yet, ironically enough, the author formerly known as Samuel Clemens was nearly driven into bankruptcy by the Paige Compositor.

A massive typesetting machine with 18,000 moving parts, the Compositor was a complete commercial failure. Twain invested at least $190,000 and 14 years worth of anxiety into the invention and came away with two prototypes, neither of which worked for very long.

All was not lost, though. One of those prototypes was willed to Columbia University, which donated it to a scrap metal drive during World War I. That means the Compositor became bullets ... and finally served a purpose.

The article above appeared in the Scatterbrained section of the Sept - Oct 2005 issue of mental_floss magazine. It is reprinted here with permission.

Don't forget to feed your brain by subscribing to the magazine and visiting mental_floss' extremely entertaining website and blog today!


Back while I was in college my Design teacher told us how the famous American architect Frank Lloyd Wright tried his hand a furniture design as well. Unfortunately, just because one can design some of the most awesome homes and building that the U.S.A. has seen, it does not mean that you can also design furniture. Apparently he used a lot of right angles in his seats which made for very uncomfortable chairs.

However, his name did inspire my pseudonym and user name.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
@Miramon

I totaly agree on that POV.

“I haven't failed, I've found 10000 ways that don't work”.

-- Thomas Alva Edison

Every area of knowledge has merit, just have to sort through the crap to find it sometimes. Even when most of it is crap your bound to get some good ideas.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Actually, Phrank, it was a common practice for design and architecture students to be tasked to design furniture pieces in the mid-to-early 20th century (and before). Many of the most famous architects of the time when commissioned to build a house also designed the home's furniture as part of the final outcome.

To say Wright failed at furniture is in the butt of the sitter (in a word), but his furniture designs were fully consistent with the plans for his buildings. Maybe he should have thought a little more like Le Corbusier when it came to seating. :-)
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
@Miramon

Your comment is heavily anachronistic. Of course Newton was preoccupied with mysticism. Mysticism *was* science then. If he were alive today he might be a scientist but he also might be a mystic. I'm inclined to think that he would be a mystic.
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Um, no, Newton was a mystical crank, he predicted the world would end in 2060 and he thought he was chosen by god to enlighten the world. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton's_occult_studies
Abusive comment hidden. (Show it anyway.)
Login to comment.
Click here to access all of this post's 12 comments
Email This Post to a Friend
"4 Quixotic Quests of the Rich and Famous"

Separate multiple emails with a comma. Limit 5.

 

Success! Your email has been sent!

close window
X

This website uses cookies.

This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using this website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

I agree
 
Learn More